Categories
Philosophy

Trump as Telemetry of Systemic Greed

Donald Trump’s political method appears less like governance than domination: pressure, spectacle, threat, loyalty-testing, and the constant conversion of complexity into personal grievance. The more important question may not be whether this reveals his own limitations, which are visible enough in the public record, but what kind of system could look at those limitations and […]

Categories
cybernetics

Do Not Pay the Bill and Learn Nothing: Fuel Shock, Delay, and Adaptive Governance

Strategic Cost Recovery. The Australian fuel shock should not be treated as a discrete price problem. It is a moving disturbance through food, freight, work, health logistics, regional supply, household mobility, business continuity, inflation expectations, and public trust. The official response has been recognisable and partly necessary: temporary fuel excise relief, reduced heavy-vehicle road charges, […]

Categories
cybernetics

The Lost Opportunity of Cybernetics

I was a student at the School of Cybernetics. I completed the Master’s in 2022 and began a PhD in 2023, before leaving for reasons of personal health and what I experienced as institutional difficulty accommodating unconventional forms of creative thought. The Master’s was challenging, but much of it was also revision for things I […]

Categories
Philosophy

Moloch: The Neurochemistry of Transnational Greed

Transnational corporate power does not merely strip-mine the material world. That would be amateur hour. It also strip-mines the symbolic order: trust, language, law, legitimacy, attention, aspiration, fear, guilt, hope, all the warm little mammals by which civilisation convinces itself it is not just a spreadsheet wearing perfume. The corporation no longer sells products in […]

Categories
Philosophy

Bad Moon Rising: The Statistical Field of Power

The statistical field is already acting before the subject appears as a moral interpreter. This is the part capitalism prefers not to see, because capitalism tells its favourite story backwards: the individual wants, chooses, competes, acquires, rises, fails, deserves. But the field has already moved first. Exposure precedes intention. Repetition precedes belief. Scarcity, status, threat, […]

Categories
cybernetics

Populism as Data Infrastructure

Populist tribalism is not merely a political mood. It is a communication environment unusually rich in signal, repetition, affect, antagonism, identity, fear, loyalty, humiliation, accusation, and recurrence. This matters because large digital platforms are not neutral carriers of public feeling. Their commercial systems depend on sustained engagement, behavioural prediction, data extraction, and increasingly fine-grained user […]

Categories
cybernetics

The Open System: Technology, Security, and the Management of Permanent Exposure

Technology is extraordinary. It extends memory, speed, coordination, reach, and control. But it also carries a persistent deception. Not because it is unreal, but because it repeatedly presents open systems as though they could be made to feel closed. Cybersecurity makes this especially clear. There is no final safety, no completed perimeter, no settled technical […]

Categories
Philosophy

Marbled: Atmospheric Modulation

Sitting alone, observing cloud define, design, drift and diffuse themselves across the sky. Tidal flows of moisture, heat and thermal rhythm: a moment of quiet reflection. It takes a universe to make a cloud. I wonder if it might also, and in some counter-intuitively enigmatic sense, take a cloud to make a universe. Can the […]

Categories
Philosophy

The Problems a System Can See

Climate breakdown, war, energy insecurity, public health strain, technocratic overreach, automated exclusion, administrative drift, and the industrial circulation of disinformation are usually treated as separate crises, each assigned its own expert language, governance model, technical platform, and emergency response. But the deeper pattern is structural. Large systems do not merely solve problems. They determine which […]

Categories
cybernetics

Services Australia: Principles for Sustainable Practice

Large public institutions drift not through incompetence but because the simplified  models they use to govern gradually diverge from the complex realities they regulate; the principles outlined here describe how that drift can be recognised and corrected before harm accumulates. Why Representational Drift Matters Large institutions cannot interact with reality directly. They act through representations: […]

Categories
Philosophy

Order, Disorder, and the Persistence of Socio-Political Form

Socio-political order does not arise because disorder has been removed, nor because conflict has been resolved. Large human systems endure by carrying tension and strain they cannot resolve: unequal interests, delayed consequences, institutional blind spots, competing stories, partial knowledge, uneven power, and the constant need to adapt. What looks like stability is usually a local […]

Categories
cybernetics

The Orchestration of Absence: Navigating Australia’s Fuel and Energy Bottleneck

In complex social, economic, and political systems, the decisive lever is not simply force, information, or speed, but time. More precisely, it is the management of uneven arrivals, delayed consequences, limited capacity, and the order in which pressures move through the field. No complex system can process everything at once. Once demands begin arriving too […]